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[QUOTE]Originally posted by mena7: [QB] [IMG]http://archive.coasttocoastam.com/timages/page/Gunnar021907m.jpg[/IMG] ) Historians are baffled by the sudden appearance of a new kind of weapon in ancient Mexico--the laminated horn bow. This weapon is very similar to the Mongolilan horn bow that Yuan explorers, Chinese merchants, and Marco Polo brought to the West Coast in the 13th and 14th centuries or just in time to enable the rag-tag Mixtec barbarians to defeat the disciplined armies of the Toltec Empire. Witnesses reported that the bows were so strong that they could fire arrows through the shields and the bodies of the Toltec soldiers who only had spears and swords [IMG]) Historians are baffled by the sudden appearance of a new kind of weapon in ancient Mexico--the laminated horn bow. This weapon is very similar to the Mongolilan horn bow that Yuan explorers, Chinese merchants, and Marco Polo brought to the West Coast in the 13th and 14th centuries or just in time to enable the rag-tag Mixtec barbarians to defeat the disciplined armies of the Toltec Empire. Witnesses reported that the bows were so strong that they could fire arrows through the shields and the bodies of the Toltec soldiers who only had spears and swords[/IMG] [IMG]http://archive.coasttocoastam.com/timages/page/Gunnar021907g.jpg[/IMG] g) Archeologists, farmers, hikers, and scuba divers have found an enormous number of Roman artifacts along the East Coast from New York to Brazil. Many coins dating from 60 AD to 400 AD. A Roman aqueduct was found near Cuzco, Peru. A cache of Roman coins was found in Venezuela. Off the coasts of Honduras and Brazil, divers have found Roman amphoras or wine jars. g) Archeologists, farmers, hikers, and scuba divers have found an enormous number of Roman artifacts along the East Coast from New York to Brazil. Many coins dating from 60 AD to 400 AD. A Roman aqueduct was found near Cuzco, Peru. A cache of Roman coins was found in Venezuela. Off the coasts of Honduras and Brazil, divers have found Roman amphoras or wine jars. [IMG]g) Archeologists, farmers, hikers, and scuba divers have found an enormous number of Roman artifacts along the East Coast from New York to Brazil. Many coins dating from 60 AD to 400 AD. A Roman aqueduct was found near Cuzco, Peru. A cache of Roman coins was found in Venezuela. Off the coasts of Honduras and Brazil, divers have found Roman amphoras or wine jars. [/IMG] h) A Roman ceramic head dating to the 2nd Century AD was found by Mexican archeologists beneath the cement floor of a pyramid at Calixtlhuaca in 1933. Archeologist Jose Garcia Payon led the excavation [IMG]h) A Roman ceramic head dating to the 2nd Century AD was found by Mexican archeologists beneath the cement floor of a pyramid at Calixtlhuaca in 1933. Archeologist Jose Garcia Payon led the excavation[/IMG] i) Mexican architects adopted many Roman features for their own buildings. We see considerable similarities between the Roman market at Baalbek, Lebanon (200 AD), and the Mexican market at Chichen Itza. Similarities include use of round columns and monumental stairways. [IMG]i) Mexican architects adopted many Roman features for their own buildings. We see considerable similarities between the Roman market at Baalbek, Lebanon (200 AD), and the Mexican market at Chichen Itza. Similarities include use of round columns and monumental stairways. [/IMG] j) This is one of many Asian junks that Yuan Chinese explorers and Marco Polo used in 1285 to map America's West Coast from Alaska to Peru [IMG]http://archive.coasttocoastam.com/timages/page/Gunnar021907n.jpg[/IMG] Most Western historians have long believed that the telescope was unknown in Europe until after it was supposedly invented either by Lepershy of Holland or Galileo in about 1600-1610. However, Gunnar Thompson has found illustrations of the telescope in drawings by Matthew of Paris (1250 AD), the Nuremberg Chronicle (1493), and several other sources. The telescope, like the magnetic compass, was condemned by Medieval Church authorities as demonic. Thus, many mariners used the device, also called a "spyglass," but they kept it to themselves--thus confusing modern historians. Telescopes were known to the Romans and the ancient Chinese [/QB][/QUOTE]
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